Narrative from
a workshop given to the Edmonton O Society
Types of First
Real-time Contact
1. Moving from
Cyber contact to the first real time meeting
2. Moving from a
vanilla acquaintance to a first “play” contact
3. Moving from a
friendship or acquaintance within the BDSM community to a first “play” session
Readying Yourself
for the First Contact
It is vital to
understand your motivation, interests, and boundaries/limits. Ask yourself
these questions.
Are you ready
for real-time contact or a first play session in general terms?
Are you ready for
real-time contact or a first play session with the person in question?
What is your
motivation?
- just curiousity
- no intention to play with this person at all, ever
- casual one time
- casual on going
- hoping for a relationship
- need/want the
experience that the other person offers
- sexual attraction
- intellectual attraction
- conquest
What are your
interests and boundaries/limitations?
- bondage
- discipline
- role play
- mind control
- edge play
- pain, giving pain
- humiliation
- sex in all its
forms
- public display
- and so on…
How I differentiate
between boundaries and limits
Boundaries are
fixed (or at least very, very slow to change). Boundaries are such that you
do not wish for them to be tested or pushed. For example, scat play for most
is a boundary. Other common ones are playing with underage persons (of course
also against the law), causing permanent injury or scarring… you get the picture.
Limits are more
temporal. They can change over time, but typically the understanding is that
if they change it will be at a gradual, measured pace. The challenge is to
not only understand what they are, but to also understand if and when and
how to test them (or be tested by them). For example, anal play may be a
limit now, but there is a desire to test it out over time, to the point that
in the future it may not be a limit at all.
Reminder:
there are people who say they don’t have any or many limits. Two things pop
to mind here. Either the person is very inexperienced or the person is very
experienced. It is important to differentiate between the two. Inexperienced
people typically claim to have few or no limits because they lack the understanding
of all that is possible in this lifestyle. They are naïve. When an experienced
submissive/slave says he/she has no limits, it is typically in the context
of that person giving over her/his limits to their Master/Mistress - because
of a long standing relationship. That being said, generally speaking a person
who says he or she has no limits is someone to be wary of.
Reminder:
just because, for example, someone likes to be whipped and bruised on their
ass does not necessarily mean they like nipple torture. In other words, extreme
play in one area of the body should not be interpreted to mean extreme play
all over the body is automatically okay.
Things to
keep in mind
1. It is my opinion
that two people who have never met before should refrain from play of any
kind (sexual included) the first time they meet in real time. The first meeting
should be devoted to a meeting of the minds, so to speak. Even if cyber sex
and play have been prevalent up to now, the first real time meeting should
be focused on getting to know one another further and, if warranted, explicit
discussion (not hot chat) about potentially playing together. What might
happen? Where would we go? What would be the time-frame? Discussion of boundaries
and limits are mandatory. Remember… in this lifestyle consent is generally
what makes the difference between assault and a great scene. Discussion about
safe words as well should take place if you are serious about playing together.
My rule is that if you can’t talk frankly about playing together, you should
not be playing together. My reasons for no play on the first meeting is not
rooted in moralism, but rather based on my own desire to promote safety.
2. However, before
you go from cyber to a real time meeting, I strongly urge you to do the following:
a) Identify yourselves
to each other. Real name, real phone number, real address, with some way
of verifying this information. I also believe exchanging work information
is warranted and should be verifiable. This is a hard one sometimes because
many of us in the lifestyle wish to preserve a certain degree of anonymity
to ensure our kink does not compromise our professional or family life.
b) There should
be an exchange of photographs, and I mean face shots!
c) It would be
advisable to know the make, colour, year, and license number of the person’s
car.
d) In these times
you might also want verification of a negative HIV test.
In practical
terms, not all of these might be necessary, but the point is that people
who enter into a power exchange should actually know one another. In real
time, screen names are not enough.
3. Safe Calls
Even when meeting
for the first time for a coffee, the submissive (though one could argue the
Dom as well) should have a safe call.
This means that
a trusted person will have a “dossier” on the person you are meeting and
knows when and where you are meeting. You agree with the person you have
appointed as your safe call that you will phone or be phoned (if you have
a cell) at an exact time or times. You should have some kind of code worked
out that you can use to denote that you are in trouble or that things are
okay. The code is important because you might be talking to your safe call
in front of your “date.”
Safe calls should
continue beyond the first meeting and I suggest they should occur during
a play session. Once the trust is there, safe calls become unnecessary.
4. If you are
uncomfortable or fearful during the first meeting, then leave. If you are
afraid of arousing suspicion, excuse yourself to go to the bathroom and then
leave. The point is that it is better you be safe than worry about being
rude.
5. If you are
a submissive, remember there is a difference between your submissive orientation
and being submissive to a Dominant. For example, you may be heterosexual
but that does not mean you have sex with anyone or everyone. You owe no submission
to the Dominant. The opposite is true as well of course. You may be a Dominant
but you have no right to expect to dominate anyone who has not explicitly
demonstrated her/his willingness to submit to you. Your first meeting should
typically be as equals. Anyone who wants it otherwise should be viewed with
considerable suspicion.
6. Warning Signs
a) The submissive
cannot articulate her needs yet still wants to play
b) The Dom seems
uninterested in the submissive’s boundaries or limits or worse, doesn’t even
know what the terms imply (yet claims to be experienced).
c) Either party
does not want you to ask others about them.
d) Either party
becomes possessive quickly
e) Threats are made
or implied, even threats like “if you talk to him or her, I will never talk
to you again.”
f) Others you trust
implicitly and who know this person are advising you against meeting him
or her.
g) Either party
is offended that you would want to check up on them.
h) Either party
is intolerant of other races or orientations to the point of being upsetting
to you.
i) Either party
appears to be on drugs or a heavy drinker
j) Either party
appears to have a short temper or be vindictive.
7. Negotiating
the First Scene
The first scene
should typically be a negotiated scene, especially when your initial relationship
was formed in cyber space or is moving from a vanilla friendship to an intimate
BDSM exchange. Be clear about what you want and don’t want. Talk about anything
and everything. Discuss if there will be sex (of any kind). Be clear about
how safe words work.
8. Safe Words
Safe words are
no guarantee with someone you do not fully trust. So forming the trust is
paramount. Safe words are a tool within the trusting relationship, not a
replacement for trust. I prefer the red, yellow, green approach because
it is easy to remember and it allows for more than just stopping a scene.
When the Dom has any doubt how things are going, He/She can ask, “Are you
still green?” The submissive can warn the Dom that things may be getting
too intense or too close to a limit by saying “yellow.” This calls for an
immediate change on the part of the Dom, or even a quick break to discuss
things. When a submissive says “Red” that means, to me, that the scene must
end for at least a period of time (half hour minimum), if not for the whole
night. Any use of the code, “Red” should be followed up by honest discussion.
In the final
analysis YOU are responsible for your own safety and your own exploration
into BDSM. Do not give that way. If you do, you will be doing yourself a
great disservice and ultimately place yourself at risk.
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